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Patient-embodied virtual reality as a learning tool for therapeutic communication skills among anaesthesiologists: A phenomenological study. | LitMetric

Objective: In medicine, especially in a preoperative setting, training of effective communication skills is challenging, since communication is often implicatively copied from professional environment. This phenomenological study describes the development and experience of two patient-embodied virtual reality experiences designed to be used as an educational tool.

Method: Two patient-embodied VR experiences from a first person patient perspective deployed negative or positive communication styles. The authors investigated the lived learning experiences of these VR tools through semi-structured interviews with ten anaesthesiologists adapting a thematic analysis framework.

Results: Interviews revealed acknowledgement of the importance of good communication skills. Overall, participants learned and adapted their style of communication 'on the job'. Patient-embodied VR was effective for a full immersive experience as participants expressed to have felt as if they had been a patient. They were able to distinguish differences in communication styles and analysis of the reflection showed a shift in perception, implying effective immersive experimental learning.

Conclusions: This study elaborated the potency of experimental learning with VR in communication in a preoperative setting. Patient-embodied VR can influence beliefs and values and demonstrated effective as an educative tool.

Practical Implications: The findings of this study can contribute to further research and healthcare education programs avid to use immersive learning with VR.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pec.2023.107789DOI Listing

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